I don’t want to shock our readers
too much. However, you should know that we prefer the New Testament holidays.
Before you cancel your subscription, please remem-ber
that the New Testa-ment holidays are the same
holidays that were celebrated in theTanakh(O.T.) and the same holi-days which will be cele-brated
when Yeshua sets up his Millennial Kingdom. Gentile nations which refuse to observe
Sukkot (“Booths”) will be plagued with drought.[1]

Richard ‘Aharon’ Chaimberlin

There is at least one exception to what I
just said. We do celebrate one holiday mentioned in the New Testament, but not
mentioned in the Tanakh:

“And it was at Jerusalem, the Feast of
Dedication (Hanukah), and it was winter. And Yeshua walked in
the Temple in Solomon’s porch. Then the Judeans gathered around him, and said
to him, ‘How long will you keep us in suspense? If you are the Messiah, tell us
plainly?’Yeshua answered them, “I told
you, and you did not believe. The works that I do in my Father’s name, these
bear witness of me.’”[2]

It is obvious
from the context that Yeshua was visiting the Temple during Hanukah. He chose
to affirm the importance of this festival. Yeshua ended up being verbally
attacked and threatened with stoning. His opponents understood that Yeshua was
promoting his divinity. They said, “For a good work we do not stone you, but
for blasphemy. For You, being a man, make yourself out to be God.”[3]

Hanukah was a holiday that was
instituted after the Israeli victory over the Greek-Syrians in the Maccabean
Revolt, when the Jews gained a miraculous victory over their oppressors. Nesgadolhaya sham! “A great miracle happened there!” This
occurred in 165 BCE, in a period of time known as the “Inter-Testamental” period,
that is, after the “Old” Testament was written, but prior to Yeshua. Therefore,
it is not mentioned in the Tanakh. This story is told the Books of Maccabees in
the Apocrypha, which is a set of good Jewish books not found in Jewish
Bibles.

If you would like to read the story for yourself, you can find the
Apocrypha in Catholic Bibles. For this reason, I would recommend that you
purchase yourself a Catholic Bible. Curiously, the entire Apo-crypha (which includes the Books of the Maccabees) were in
the original 1611 version of the King James Bible. Most of the Bibles which
today purport to be “original” 1611 King James Version are actually the 4th
revision of the 1611 KJV. Today's "1611 KJV" is much more accurately
the 1769 King James Version. A copy of the genuine 1611 King James Bible
can be ordered directly through Thomas Nelson Publishers, or can be ordered at
a Bible Book Store. However, the language and font are very archaic and
difficult, much harder to understand than the so-called “1611 KJV” Bibles
promoted by many Christians today. The Septuagint[4]
is a Jewish translation of the Tanakh into Greek done in about 200 BCE. It contained
all the books that are called the “Old Testament” as well as the Apocrypha.
(The Apocrypha was added to the Septuagint a century later.)

In about 333
BCE, Alexander the Great and his armies had conquered the Middle East, including
Israel, and went on to conquer much additional land, even to the Indus River in
India. Although Alexander promoted Greek religion, culture, and language, he
didn’t force it on his subjects. Alexander died at the age of only 33 (just
like Yeshua!), after which his huge empire was split into four parts to be
ruled over by each of his four generals. Those who came after Alexander were
much less tolerant of non-Greek cultures and religion.

Israel was on a “land bridge” highly prized
by the Ptolemy dynasty that ruled Egypt, and by the Seleucid
Dynasty that ruled the Syrian portion of the divided Greek Empire. Eventually,
the Seleucids gained the upper hand, and conquered Israel. Antiochus IV
eventually came to rule over Israel. He was an extremely cruel and intolerant
king. He forbade circumcision, Sabbath observance, reading of Torah, or
celebration of the Feasts. The penalty for observing the commandments of YHWH
was torture and/or death. He encouraged Greek culture and religion, and found
many Jews who willingly and even happily collaborated to turn Israel into a
Greek society.

The pagans had defiled the Temple, even
sacrificing pigs on the altar. The Jews, under the Hasmonean leadership of
Mattathias (“Matityahu”) and his sons, eventually won a miraculous victory. It
was guerrilla warfare, where a small, make-shift army won against the mighty
Syrian Greek army. According to legend, when they went to re-light the NerTamid (Eternal
Light) of the Temple, they discovered a vial of oil which was only adequate to
keep the light burning for one day. Nevertheless, they re-lit the NerTamid, and began a search for
sanctified oil that could keep the NerTamid burning. The search took 8 days, during which time
the NerTamid miraculously
kept burning with the one-day supply of oil.

Curiously, the story of the NerTamid burning miraculously for 8 days is not told in the
books of the Maccabees at all. It is perhaps a later invention that was added
to the Hanukah story. Originally, Hanukah was made into an 8-day festival as an
imitation of Sukkot,[5]
which is also an 8-day festival, but which the Jews were unable to observe at
the proper time because of the ongoing war.

Hundreds of years later, the story of the one-day supply of oil lasting
for 8 days was written into the Talmud.[6]
The military victory of the few against the many was downplayed. However,
Zechariah 4:6 is still quoted during Hanukah: “Not by might, nor by power, but by my spirit, saith the LORD of hosts.”

Jews in the Galut (Diaspora) have traditionally shunned wanting to
celebrate military victories, so as to not provoke anti-Semitism in various
host nations. This might be one of the reasons for inventing the story of the NerTamid burning miraculously
for 8 days on a one-day supply of oil. There is another reason for
de-emphasizing the military victory: The Hasmonean Dynasty was originally
anti-assimilationist. They preserved Jewish religion and fought off pagan
religious influences. Jews were again free to celebrate their faith without
pagan influences.

However, future generations of the Hasmonean Dynasty
became pro-assimilationist. They promoted Greek culture, Greek language, and
even Greek religion. As a result, the Talmud is very quiet about the Hasmoneans,
sort of ignoring a family that started out extremely good, but went tragically
bad, succumbing to the paganism in the world at that time.

Hanukah comes at a time of the year when
Christians are celebrating Christmas. As a result, it is often identified as a
sort of Jewish Christmas. Actually, Hanukah was celebrated for hundreds of
years before Christmas was first celebrated, and therefore has no historical
relationship with Christmas.[7]
The story of the vial of oil lasting for 8 days can’t begin to compare with the
appeal of the story of the virgin birth of a baby in a manger. Moreover, as we
celebrate the re-dedication of the Temple, we do so with the knowledge that the
Temple was completely destroyed in 70 CE.[8]
So we end up celebrating a Temple that no longer exists.

RE-DEDICATINGOURTEMPLES

We are not
completely without a Temple. Rav Shaul spoke of our
bodies as being temples of the Ruakh HaKodesh (the Holy Spirit):

“Do
you not know that you are the temple of God, and that the Spirit of God
dwells in you? If any man defiles the temple of God, him shall God destroy, for
the temple of God is holy, which is what you are. Let no man deceive
himself. If any man among you seems to be wise in this world, let him become a
fool, that he may be wise. For the wisdom of this world is foolishness with
God.”[9]Also:“Do you not know that your bodies are the
members of Messiah? Shall I then take the members of Messiah and make them
members of a harlot? May it never be! What? Do you not know that he which is
joined to a harlot is one body with her? For He says, ‘The two shall become one flesh (Genesis 2:24).’ But the one who
joins himself to HaShem is one spirit with Him. Flee sexual immorality. Every
sin that a man does is without the body, but he that commits sexual immorality
sins against his own body. Or do you not know that your body is a temple of
the Holy Spirit who is in you, whom you have from God, and that you are not
your own? For you have been bought with a price: therefore
glorify God in your body.”[10]

“Do not be yoked together with unbelievers.
For what partnership has Messiah with Beliel, or what
has a believer in common with an unbeliever? Or what agreement has the temple
of God with idols? For we are the temple ofthe living God. Just as God said, ‘I
will dwell in them, and walk in them, and I will be their God, and they shall
be My people. Therefore, come out from
among them, andbe separate,’
saith Adonai, ‘and touch not the unclean
(unclean food, pagan holidays, idols, sin, etc.), and I will receive you,
and will be a Father to you, and you shall be my sons and daughters,’ saith the
Almighty.”[11]

Let us today rededicate our temples, our
bodies, which are the temples of the Ruakh HaKodesh. And, just as with the
Temple in Jerusalem, we are required to make sacrifices: “I beseech you
therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that you present your bodies as living sacrifice, holy,
acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service.” [12]

APPLICATION: Just as the Maccabees sought to
cleanse the Jewish religion and the Temple of unclean pagan influences, so we
today need to cleanse our faith from the pagan influences so prevalent in our
society and in the churches. In the event that the churches don’t want to
change, it would be best to do as the Puritans of old did, and as Rav Shaul said, “Therefore, come out from among them and be separate.” Our Heavenly Father does not like
mixture religion, in which the pagan elements are mixed with the true faith.

Occasionally, people still think of
Messianic Judaism as being a “mixture” religion, in which Judaism and
Christianity are “mixed together.” The truth is that Messianic Judaism was the
faith of the First Century believers. It wasn’t a new religion; it was merely a
bunch of Jews who had come to know their Messiah. The so-called “church” of the
First Century was following that “old-time religion,” which happened to be
Judaism. Yeshua did not come to establish a new religion; He came to be
the Messiah for the “old” religion - Judaism! He remained a loyal Jew
who worshipped the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and obeyed Torah.

There weren’t any people called Christians until
large numbers of Gentiles came to believe in the Jewish Messiah as we discover
in Acts 11:20-26. The Christian faith of the First Century Gentiles was quite
pure. It wasn’t until later centuries that Christianity became polluted with
idolatry and pagan holidays, which were “Christianized” in order to make Christianity
more appealing to the pagans.

We are called to be a “light to the world.”
We can’t do that if we are still holding onto our cherished pagan traditions.
Our disobedience is actually delaying Messiah’s return. Yeshua said to Israel:
“You shall not see Me again until you
say, ‘Blessed is He who comes in the Name of the Lord.”[13] Or, in the Hebrew,
“Baruch habab’shem
Adonai.” Currently, the biggest stumbling block to Jews coming to know
their Messiah are those who call themselves Christians, as well as the history
of Christianity vs. the Jewish people. Romans 11:11 tells us to “provoke the
Jews to jealousy.” Thus far most Jews have only been provoked. The Jews will
say to Yeshua, “Baruch habab’shem
Adonai” when the Church repents of its paganism and returns to the faith of
the First Century. The Church must present Yeshua as He really is: a
Torah-observant Jewish rabbi who taught his disciples to honor and obey
Torah (Matthew 5:17-19) and then told them to teach the nations (Gentiles) to
obey the Law (Matthew 28:18-20). The Church must stop presenting a Jesus who
abolished the Law. Rav Shaul said, “For if one comes
and preaches another Jesus whom we
have not preached, or you receive a different
Gospel, which you have not accepted, you bear this beautifully.”[14]The
only problem is that another Jesus
cannot save us. We need to return to the Yeshua of the
Bible, not to the Greek god that He has often been turned into.

ADDENDUM: If you don’t already know it, we want you
to know that Yeshua was not born in December. In all likelihood, he was
born on the first day of Feast of Sukkot (“Tabernacles”). But if you go back
about 280 days before Sukkot, you will find yourself in Chanukah. Therefore,
Chanukah is the time during which Yeshua was conceived of a virgin, a great
miracle! Yeshua celebrated Hanukah. You can also! Purchase or build a Hanukiah, which is a candelabrum with 8 branches for each
of the 8 nights of Hanukah, plus a holder for the Shammash
(servant candle) which is used to light the other candles. It is also a
tradition to eat latkes. These are “pancakes” made of grated potatoes, onions,
eggs, and flour, fried in oil, and often eaten with sour cream or applesauce.
Yummy!